Far-right media seize on flawed Bloomberg article to push bogus “deep state” theories

Bloomberg suggested that climate scientists doing their jobs are trying to “undermine” Trump

Sarah Wasko / Media Matters

A Bloomberg article unfairly portrayed government employees who are producing accurate climate change reports as “quietly working to undermine Trump's agenda.” Conspiracy theorists and right-wing media figures quickly pounced on the article as evidence for their paranoid "deep state" theories.

Bloomberg piece claimed that “bureaucrats” working on climate reports are trying to “obstruct” the president

The December 18 Bloomberg article argued that “some of the roughly two million career staff [in the federal government] have found ways to obstruct, slow down or simply ignore their new leader, the president.” The first and most prominent example in the article involved government reports on climate change:

In report after report following Donald Trump’s election, career staffers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration [NOAA] kept saying the same thing: climate change is real, serious and man-made.

That’s surprising because Trump has called global warming a hoax. His political appointees at the Commerce Department, which oversees NOAA, have complained to its staff, but stopped short of demanding changes or altering the findings. So the reports, blog posts and public updates kept flowing. The bureaucrats won.

By saying that NOAA employees “won,” Bloomberg painted them as political operatives engaging in partisan warfare instead of as civil servants employing science in the public interest. The article later acknowledged that NOAA staffers are right on the substance, but still mischaracterized their actions:

As the case of NOAA illustrates, the most radical example of bureaucratic resistance may also be the simplest: continuing to issue information or reports that are factually accurate, even when they clash with the administration’s policies.

Issuing factually accurate information to the public should not be characterized as “radical.” It should be characterized as people doing their jobs correctly.

The article also highlights activities by employees at agencies like the State Department and the General Services Administration (GSA), some of whom seem to be trying to make their Obama-era projects align better with Trump-era priorities. The GSA, for example, is now promoting its initiative to buy electric vehicles on economic grounds rather than environmental ones. This, though, is hardly nefarious stuff.

Right-wing media spun Bloomberg article as evidence for their conspiracy theories

But while the Bloomberg article doesn't offer much evidence to support its thesis of federal employees mounting “radical … resistance” to Trump, its framing has been enough to get right-wingers and conspiracy theorists excited. They're claiming it supports their belief that career government employees are secretly sabotaging President Trump.

Infowars, the website run by notorious conspiracy theorist and fake-news disseminator Alex Jones, is touting the story. So is Infowars' D.C. bureau chief:

The Conservative Daily Post and Before It's News, both of which are known to be fake-news purveyors, wrote up the Bloomberg article on their websites. Drudge Report, the conservative blog Instapundit, and the far-right site American Action News are promoting it too.

Conservative media figures have also joined in to amplify the story, including a contributor to the Heritage Foundation's Daily Signal website and the editor of the Washington Free Beacon:

Within the Bloomberg news organization itself, there seems to be disagreement about whether or not the article supports “deep state” theories.

Aaron Rutkoff, a senior editor at Bloomberg, says no:

But Alex Wayne, Bloomberg Business' White House editor, says yes:

When the reporting of basic scientific facts is considered radical and political, then we're in trouble.

The magazine Scientific American warned about the politicization of science in an editorial published during the 2016 presidential campaign: “A respect for evidence is not just a part of the national character. It goes to the heart of the country's particular brand of democratic government. When the founding fathers, including Benjamin Franklin, scientist and inventor, wrote arguably the most important line in the Declaration of Independence—'We hold these truths to be self-evident'—they were asserting the fledgling nation's grounding in the primacy of reason based on evidence.”

Journalists, of all people, should hold fast to the idea that reporting facts is not an extreme or ideological act. It's simply a necessary one.